well, i did not think i was ever going to write anything on this forum ever again, but it's 2021 and anything can happen!!
i fell in love with ssss as a comic early 2015, and engaged with the community An Normal Amount (i'm still #4 on the top posters board i see), and took my distance for many of the same reasons as others did (discomfort with the Incident, burnt out from putting so many of my eggs in this basket, a need to flourish elsewhere). i think i've grown & changed as a person and artist since then, and my relationship with ssss has fluctuated a lot - i can never seem to just put it down. last year, seeing how norway and the other nordic countries handled the pandemic gave me a hunger to revisit the comic for some comforting familiarity, like yes, i am aware of its flaws and i am aware of my discomfort with many of the elements, but i am reminded of what i loved about it, too. it's the joy of seeing a sprawling story represent my culture (albeit limited in many ways), the characters and their relationships with one another, the language barriers, their relationships with religion. i don't think i've ever read it so much for the Story and whatever Points it's tried to make, as much for the exploration of the world and how it's inspired me.
now then.
when i decided to reread the comic in 2020, i decided it was for
me, on
my terms. i was going to have to trust my critical reading skills and my ability to enjoy whatever this comic gave me the first time i read it five years before regardless of my issues and my history with the community. and like, it worked. i fell a little bit in love again, even if apprehensively so. i even got inspired to draw some art again, and this time i did it because i wanted to, not because i felt obliged to, or wanted to please someone else. i could have been happy in that space of carving out my own terms. but the world keeps turning and i don't live in a vacuum and neither does anyone else. i was lucky that i got some heads-up about some Odd Vibes when minna announced her minicomic and the way she announced it, and even more warnings about what the comic was about when it was unleashed upon the world. i was not completely blindsided, but... how do you say it? i had no expectations and i was still let down.
as a dystopia story, it reads as a very shallow one. it BARELY scratches the surface of what an "everyone sit down and play nice" social media corporate dystopia can be. none of this commentary is new or groundbreaking in any way - brave new world was published 90 years ago, was it not? yes, yes, it makes 'Some Good Points', i'm on twitter too, i'm familiar with how the deeply cynical ways social media platforms operate. i'm also familiar with how pretty much every person on twitter critiques social media, influencer/celebrity culture, capitalism, and corporations. i've seen 15 year olds write indepth critique of the current capitalist hellscape. i'm also currently seeing a lot of artists and musicians i respected sell their souls to dabble in cryptocurrency because hey burning down the planet is fine as long as you get paid enough, so yes, i AM aware of where this timeline is going. so are a lot of people! maybe it's just the sphere i am in, but the dystopia presented in the comic doesn't make me say "hmmm really makes you think" but rather "way ahead of you".
it's like... trying to make a very political comic but removing any trace of politics. trying to make a story about oppression without wanting to understand the dynamics behind an oppressive society. the Dystopian Society tells you to not question it, don't think about the people it's hurting, and the conclusion of the story is to... escape it the moment
you are inconvenienced, no questions asked? sure. WHY NOT. SATISFYING CONCLUSION ACHIEVED???? i can only agree with everyone else who talked about how the story could've been improved by making the bunnies start to question their society a bit more, give them some more time to dig a little bit deeper. question authority, think critically. but it does not feel like that's the story that minna wanted to tell, to be honest. it seems more like the story here "society bad because it makes you forego the bible, the ONLY thing that matters in your life. we have all strayed from the Tru Path". whoof.
like... it's not that i absolutely cannot imagine a society where christians are persecuted? my mother grew up in soviet czechoslovakia, which WAS a totalitarian regime that DID censor certain media. if i remember correctly, she told me my grandparents got married in a church - for political reasons, as an act of protest. doing things like this could cause 'nudges' such as demotion at work, or no longer being able to attend a certain university. this is just my memory of things i was told when i asked my mom about attending a revolution, so i apologize if i am mixing up facts and hearsay. but it's deeply tonedeaf to go "imagine a world that's gone so awry that people are punished for their FAITH!" as if it's not a reality for many, many religious people already, especially muslims and jewish people... again, i might be wrong here, but it seems to me that these persecutions are rooted in many lines and intersections of oppression and history, not just "grrr they believe in god and that's stupid". there's a machinery of politics driving these engines. it does not exist in a vacuum, and lovely people does not even dip its toe into that pool. there's this disconnect between an absolutely made-up world where everyone is a cute bunny living separate from our messy human world, and the religion VERY EXPLICITLY being christianity. CAN you put christianity in such a vacuum?
i'm an agnostic raised by atheists, and my relationship to christianity and other religions is mostly academic. i haven't had many experiences with it, neither good nor bad, and i sincerely enjoy media that explores these topics. i mean, my favourite band is the oh hellos, who have recently released a series of EPs that are explicitly exploring their relationship to their faith and growing up in the american south. a lot of it flies over my head due to my religious iliteracy, but my point is that if the bunny comic had like, actually explored what that christian faith means in a consumerist world, what real kindness looks like in a world of shallow niceties, that could've made for a more interesting story - but i'm starting to think it's very generous of me to assume minna wanted to tell a solid dystopia story with themes that work and not just.. promote an agenda.
so uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuh that afterword, huh. it was really alarming to read, as someone whose personal experiences with organized religion has been very mild and chill. the only time someone has told me, an openly trans and queer person, i'm going to hell was some guy who didn't like that i was wearing a hoodie on norway's constitution day. i can't say i care for it.
gods know i've spent way too much time of my life thinking about what minna's intentions and experiences might or might not be beyond what she's written, so i'm not going to do that, especially when many others have gone into it much better than i could have. i DO respect her decisions to end the comic whenever she wants to end it (it's probably a mercy at this point), not wanting to work on certain projects anymore, and locking a comment section when she needs to. everyone has a right to decide what to put their energy and time towards. (i also DO find it funny how she's locked down her comment sections after releasing a comic about a social media dystopia that's so sinister for restricting speech... imagine being moderated...)
but here's what i returned to the forum to say. here are some things i personally deeply believe in:
being a human person is a difficult and messy thing to be. we are always learning, growing, and changing. we cannot know what we don't know, we can always make an effort to learn. punishing yourself for not growing fast enough is never going to enhance that growth. sending yourself into a spiral of guilt and self-loathing serves nobody (except maybe whoever is trying to take advantage of you), and especially not yourself. by failing you learn to fail better next time. and there
should be a next time! i believe in forgiveness and i believe in keeping your boundaries. being kind and understanding of yourself makes it easier to be kinder and more understanding towards others. i believe in allowing yourself to feel anger, as well every other 'bad' emotion, to follow the threads and see where they go. i believe every single person is worthy of human rights and dignity and respect, no matter how much i might despise someone - and sometimes that respect means to draw a boundary or cut ties with them, because i'm worthy of it too. i believe in asking and listening and expanding your understanding of the vast human experience. i believe in thinking critically and questioning institutions and traditions and trends around us. i believe in acting with compassion beyond just saying words about it. i believe in creating solid communities. i believe in embracing the flawed and brittle existence i have in this life on this earth, and acknowledge that i am part of world that is happening as i speak.
that's all i think